ML17262A045: Difference between revisions

From kanterella
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Created page by program invented by StriderTol)
(StriderTol Bot change)
 
(3 intermediate revisions by the same user not shown)
Line 2: Line 2:
| number = ML17262A045
| number = ML17262A045
| issue date = 09/18/2017
| issue date = 09/18/2017
| title = 9/18/2017, Conversation Record with J. Harrison Et Al. Conference Call to Discuss the Status of the Review of the Letter Authorization Request for the Model Number RAJ-II (CAC No. L25239), Non-Proprietary Information. Conversation Held On.
| title = 9/18/2017, Conversation Record with J. Harrison Et Al. Conference Call to Discuss the Status of the Review of the Letter Authorization Request for the Model Number RAJ-II (CAC No. L25239), Non-Proprietary Information. Conversation Held on
| author name = Ahn T M
| author name = Ahn T
| author affiliation = NRC/NMSS/DSFM/RMB
| author affiliation = NRC/NMSS/DSFM/RMB
| addressee name = Harrison J
| addressee name = Harrison J
Line 13: Line 13:
| document type = Note to File incl Telcon Record, Verbal Comm
| document type = Note to File incl Telcon Record, Verbal Comm
| page count = 3
| page count = 3
| project = CAC:L25239
| stage = Approval
}}
}}


=Text=
=Text=
{{#Wiki_filter:U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION NRC F ORM 699 ** .,, ..... (03-2013) f d ,**s DATE OF SIGNATURE  
{{#Wiki_filter:U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION NRC FORM 699  
; ':/_! '\., .J." CONVERSATION RECORD 1/f1(UJJIJ  
**.,,..... ~.,.
...... NAME OF P E RSON(S) CONTACTED OR I N CO NT ACT WITH YOU J a m es H a rri so n. e t a l. E-MAIL ADDRESS ja m es.h a r r i so n@ge.co m ORGANIZATION G l oba l N u c l ea r F u e l -A m e ri cas (GNF-A) LICENSE NU M BER(S) NA SUBJECT DOCKET NU M BER(S) 0 7 1 09 3 09 CONTROL NUMBER(S)
(03-2013) f  
NA DATE OF CONTACT TYPE OF CONVERSATION 08/1 6/2 0 1 7 TELEPHONE NUMBER (9 1 0) 62 0-18 26 D E-MAIL 0 TELEPHONE D INCOMING 0 OUTGOING NON-P R O PRI ETA RY I N F O R M AT I O ---8/1 6/2 017 , 10: 00 A M CO F E R ENCE CA LL TO D I SCUSS T H E STATUS OF T H E R EV I EW OF T H E L ETTE R AUT H O R I ZAT I O R EQUEST FO R T H E M O D E L UM B ER R A J-II (CAC 0. L252 3 9)  
~ d,**s DATE OF SIGNATURE  
':/_!  
'\\.,  
.J."
CONVERSATION RECORD 1/f1(UJJIJ NAME OF PERSON(S) CONTACTED OR IN CONTACT WITH YOU James Harrison. et al.
E-MAIL ADDRESS james.harrison@ge.com ORGANIZATION Global Nuclear Fuel - Americas (GNF-A)
LICENSE NUMBER(S)
NA SUBJECT DOCKET NUMBER(S) 07109309 CONTROL NUMBER(S)
NA DATE OF CONTACT TYPE OF CONVERSATION 08/ 16/2017 TELEPHONE NUMBER (9 10) 620-1826 D
E-MAIL 0 TELEPHONE D
INCOMING 0 OUTGOING NON-PROPRI ETARY INFORMATIO ---8/ 16/2017, 10:00 AM CO FERENCE CALL TO DISCUSS THE STATUS OF THE REV IEW OF THE LETTER AUTHORIZATIO REQUEST FOR THE MODEL UM BER RAJ-II (CAC
: 0. L25239)  


==SUMMARY==
==SUMMARY==
A tt en d ees: N R C Jo hn Mc Ki rga n Travi s Tate Norma Ga r c i a Sa nt os Tae A hn A n drew B a rt o Kim Yo n g Joseph B orows k y Cay l ee K e nn y Da n ie l Fo r sy th Cont i nue on Page 2 ACTION REQUIRED (IF ANY) See umm ary. C ontinue on Page 3 G NF-A Ja m es H a rri so n Ju s tin L a m y C hri s t o ph e r Kmi ec J a m es Fawce tt R o b e rt R a nd M i n e Yi l m az Br i a n E b e r Ru ss Fawce tt NAME OF PERSON DOCUMENTING CONVERSATION Nor m a Ga r c i a Sa nt os, e t a l. SIGNATURE NR C FORM 699 (03-2013)
Attendees:
Pag e 1 of 3 NRC FO RM 699 (03-20 1 3) U.S. NU CLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION CONV E RSATION RECORD (continued)  
NRC John McKi rgan Travis Tate Norma Garcia Santos Tae Ahn Andrew Barto Kim Yong Joseph Borowsky Caylee Kenny Daniel Forsyth Continue on Page 2 ACTION REQUIRED (IF ANY)
See ummary.
Continue on Page 3 GNF-A James Harrison Justin Lamy Christopher Kmiec James Fawcett Robert Rand Mine Yi lmaz Brian Eber Russ Fawcett NAME OF PERSON DOCUMENTING CONVERSATION Norma Garcia Santos, et al.
SIGNATURE NRC FORM 699 (03-2013)
Page 1 of 3  
 
NRC FORM 699 (03-2013)
U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION CONVERSATION RECORD (continued)  


==SUMMARY==
==SUMMARY==
: (Continued from page 1) I On August 16 , 2017, NRC and G F-A parti c ip a ted on a ph o n e call t o discuss s t a tu s of the r ev i ew of th e letter a uth orization for th e Model o. R AJ-I I for transporting accident tolerant fuel (ATF) lead t est asse mb l i es (LT As), ga in a co mm o n und ersta ndin g about the licensing action requested , co mmuni ca te c hall e n ges associa ted with the revie J, a nd di sc u ss a possible path fo r ward t o continue the review of the app li cation. The fo ll owing it ems s umm ar i ze th e di sc u ss i on during the A u g u st 16 telephone ca ll. The staff sta rt e d the meetin g b y go in g ove r the main as pe c t s of the cove r l etter 1 s ubmitt e d with the app li ca ti on t o ensu r e th at th e s taff and the applicant h ad a co mm o n und e r sta ndin g of the li censi n g actions bein g requested.
: (Continued from page 1)
The pa11icipants agreed on the fol l ow in g: I. The li ce n s in g ac ti on r e que s t co n s i s ted of up t o 16 ATF l ea d te st r ods in s id e of two G F2 fuel asse mbli es (a maximum of 8 ATF l ead test rods per asse mbl y) p e r packa ge with a maximum of tw o p ac ka ges p e r s hipm e nt. 2. The A TF rods m ay conta in Type A fissile fuel a nd the G F2 fu e l will co nt ai n previously a pp roved Type B quantity fuel. 3. The ATF w ill be transported in a Type B s hipm e nt. 4. T h e app li ca nt i s requ es ting o ne s hipm e nt per yea r from 2 017 t o 2 019. In terms of th e number of A TF asse mbli es to be s hipped p e r yea r , o n th e t o p of page 2 of the cover l et t e r , th e app li cant menti o ned that there wo uld be m ax imum of 4 A TF l ead t ests assemblies per s hipm e nt. The s t ate m e nt o n th e top of pa ge 2 of the cover l e tt er seemed to be in agree m e nt w ith page 3 o f th e cover l e tt e r in which the a pplicant s t a t ed (in proposed co nditi o n 4) that "There s h a ll be a ma xi mum of two R A J-II packages o n s in g l e tru ck , each co nt a ining a ma x imum of tw o LT As." On th e propo ed condi ti o n 5 , th e app li cant m entio n ed that " R AJ-II p ac k ages w ith G F A TF LT As s h a l l co mmin g le w ith o th e r R AJ-II package s ... " T h e r efore, it was not c l ear fo r the s taff th e maximum number of A TF Fe C rA I rods p e r packa ge a nd the n u mb e r of p ac k ages that w ill be s hipp ed at a n y given time on a truck , includin g GNF ATF L TAs. The ap pli ca nt indicated th at th e fo l l ow in g: I. The maximum numb e r of ATF ro d s in a p ackage will be 16. 2. T h e maximum numb e r of p ac k ages per tru c k (in c l udin g th e p ac k ages containing ATF L TAs) will be 1 3-1 4 package s. 3. The near term plan is to s hip t wo R A J-II p ackages co nt a inin g ATF L TAs co mmin g ling w ith ot h er package s co nt aining GNF fuel. 4. The applicant reque s t ed th e fl ex ibili ty to s hip GNF fuel with GNF fuel co nt a inin g ATF FeC r A I rods. The wo rdin g of the proposed Co nditi o n 4 was c l ea r th a t a ma x imum of tw o p ackages co uld b e l oade d per truck. When o n e memb er of the applicant's o r ga ni za ti on m e nti o n ed th a t the co nditi o n did n o t pr ec lud e addi ti o n al p ackages o n a truck. ano th e r G F-A m e mb e r ri g htly s tated that th e word in g co uld b e imp roved t o ex pr ess the app l i cat i o n's c l ea r int e nti on. Ba se d o n the eva luati o n sectio n of the cover l etter , the s taff aske d ifthe a ppli ca nt was r e l y ing o n the c l ad din g as th e containment boundary or not , s in ce the eva lu at i o n sect i o n mentions th a t the s tru c tural a nd thermal eva lu a ti o n s demonstrated that the G F FeCrA I f u e l rods would n ot ruptur e. T he a pplicant c l a rified th a t s inc e the a pp l ication Ii i1i ts FeCrA I fue l rods t o Type A fis s ile con t e nt , th e app li ca nt i s not r e l y ing o n the c l a ddin g as th e co nt a inm ent boundary , but as a b a rrier t o m a int ai n the pellet s in a sa fe geometry (i.e .. for critica lit y safe ty purpose s). The a ppli cant a l so indi cate d th a t it a n a l yzed water e nt e rin g into th e p e ll et-c l add in g gap. The staff mentioned that a co n ce rn was fa ilur e of the c l a ddin g r esu ltin g in p e ll e t s ge tting o ut of the c l a ddin g and radioactive mat e rial reconfi g urati o n. T he applicant m e nti o n e d that ifthe cladding bur s t , the app l i ca nt d oes n ot h ave ph ys i cal d a t a t o indi ca t e that pell et migration o ut s id e of the rod is possible.
I On August 16, 2017, NRC and G F-A participated on a phone call to discuss status of the review of the letter authorization for the Model
The app li ca nt p o int e d o ut th a t U R EG/C R-1 458 a nd NU R EG/C R-5892 d oc ument a I transportation acc id e nt in vo l v ing a s hipm e nt ofG F fuel asse mbli es (in c luding a beyond design basis tire), w hi c h cau s ed a br eac h of the c l adding. T h ese NU R EGs concluded th a t there was n o fuel or p e ll e t mi grati n o ut s id e of the fuel rod a nd that a c riti ca lit y accident was n o t possible during th e acc id e nt o r after th e tir e. The a ppli ca nt p o int e d o ut thi s was in c lud ed in Sect i o n 6.6.2.2 of th e Letter Authorizat i on R eq u est. T he a ppli ca nt pointed out that , c urr e ntl y, th e st ru c tural a nd thermal a n a l yses d o n ot s upp o rt mi gration of pellet s o u ts id e of the c l a ddin g und er h ypot h etical acc id e nt co nditi o n s. H oweve r , s t aff had co mm e nt s/qu es ti o n s with the s tructural a n d th e rm a l a n a l yses provided. The discussion b e l ow includ es the s t af f s init i al co mm e n t s and qu es ti o n s r e lat ed t o the a ppli cat i o n. Materials Eva lu atio n The staff pointed o ut that th e FeCrAI mat e rial i s a ferritic stee l. Therefore , th e ta ff indi ca t e d that the a ppli ca nt s h ou ld u se R egu l atory Guide 7. I I as mentio n e d in the pr e-a ppli cat i on m ee tin g. The s ta ff as k ed i f the ssess m e nt of the c l add in g inte g rity was based o n th e 9 meter drop te s t ass uming z ir co nium mat e ri a l. T he a ppli ca nt r es p o nd e d that was correct. The staff a l so m entio n ed th at Figure 2-1 of At t ac hm e nt 3 of the a ppl i ca ti o n in c l ud es a s train c urv e at -2 0 F. The a ppli ca nt tated th at t est in g of th e FeC r A I m ate ri a l was performed a t a s train rate of[w ithh e ld p e r 10 CF R 2,390 (a pp l i ca ti o n)], to which the s t aff co mm e nt ed th at it wa hi g h in compa ri so n of a co n ventio n a l stra in rate. T he a ppli ca nt indi cated that the s t ra in rate was ba se d o n the fo ll ow in g: NRC FORM 699 (03-2013)
: o. RAJ-I I for transporting accident tolerant fuel (ATF) lead test assemblies (LT As), gain a common understanding about the licensing action requested, communicate challenges associated with the revieJ, and discuss a possible path forward to continue the review of the application. The fo llowing items summarize the discussion during the August 16 telephone call.
Page 2 of 3 NRC FORM 699 (03-2 013) U.S. NUCL E AR REGULA TOR Y COMMISSION CONVERSATION RECORD (continued)
The staff started the meeting by going over the main aspects of the cover letter1submitted with the application to ensure that the staff and the applicant had a common understanding of the licensing actions being requested. The pa11icipants agreed on the fol lowing:
ACTION R E QU I RE D (Co nt i nu ed from pa g e 1) I. the d ur a ti o n o f th e imp ac t of th e R A J-II p ac k age in pr ev i o u s drop te s t s of z ir co nium a ll oy; 2. t he s train ra te o f the c l a ddi n g i s " co ntro ll e d" b y th e p ac ka ge d es i gn (s i n c e th e pa c k age d es i g n did n o t c h a n ge, the a ppli ca nt ass um e d th a t the s train ra t e did n o t c han ge); a nd 3. t h e ass umpti o n th a t th e d es i g n o f the z ir co nium a ll oy a nd A TF LT A fu e l bundl e d es i g ns a re s imil a r fo r th e limit ed n u mb e r of FeC r A I rod s in a n ATF L T A. T he a ppli ca nt di d n ot p e r fo rm ph ys i c al d rop t es ts w ith FeC r A I ro ds a nd ass um e d th ese w e r e b o und ed b y (o r e qui va l e nt t o) th e t es tin g p e r fo rm e d wi th z ir co nium a ll oy ro d s. Th e r efo r e, th e appli c ant's a ppro a ch i s t o u se th e t es tin g t o ce rti fy th e R A J-II p ackage fo r th e ATF a ppli ca ti o n. T he s t aff indi ca t e d t h a t the s train ra t e m ay b e acce pt a b l e, but the s t aff s till n ee d s in fo rm a ti on t o d e t e rmine w h e th e r th e r e m ay be a l oca li ze d effect r e lat ed t o th e F eC r A I m a t e ri a l. The a ppli ca nt n o t e d th a t th e F eC r A I s urvi ve d fr o m a hi g h s t ra in ra t e t e n s il e t es t w ith o ut a fr ac tur e. The s t aff p o int e d o ut t h a t the c l adding of t he A T F F eC r A I r od i s ve r y thin a nd t he s t a ff wo uld n ee d th e fol l ow in g: I. co nfirm (from r e l a t e d lit era tur e d a ta or t es tin g) th a t th e s l o pe o f s tr ess-s t ra in c u rve i s hi g h e r fo r FeC r A I co mp a r ed to t h a t fo r z ir ca l oy. (Oth e r w i se, FeC r A I rods a m o ng z ir co niu m a ll oy rod s m ay b e b ul ge d o ut o r brok e n durin g d ro p. P rov id e th e s tr ess-s t ra in c ur ves fo r F eC r A I a nd z ir c al oy c l addin gs so th a t a co mpari so n can b e m a d e.) 2. d ata re l ated t o mi cro h a rdn ess t es tin g , fr ac tur e t es tin g, C h a rp y V-n o t ch t es t , t c.; 3. s t rai n c u rve at l ow t e mp e r a tur e (t o ve ri fy whether the s train rat e is a ppropri a t e fo r F eC r A I); a nd 4. a t e mp era tur e ra n ge t o m a intain th e i n te g r i ty of t h e c l a ddi n g. T h e ap pli ca ti o n co nt a ins a r e quir e m e nt fo r th e Y o un g's M o dulu s in A tta c h m e nt 2 Ta b le 2-5 (a l so r e p ea t e d in Ta bl e 1-2) w hi ch r e quir es a minim um M o du lus o f E l a s ti c i t y for the G F F eC r A I m a t e ri al t o b e u se d. The a pp l i ca nt s t a t e d th a t th e l owe r t e mp era tur e of th e HA C i s -40°C so t h at w a s t h e t e mp e r a tur e th a t th e t est w as p e r fo rm ed t o b o und th e n ecessary t e mp e r a tur e r a n ge of opera t io n. A S tr ess-S train c urv e fo r th e GNF FeC r A I m a t e ri a l a t -4 0°C i s p rov id e in A tta c hm e nt 3 F i g ur e 2-1. T h e R eg ul a t o ry G u id e 7.11 r e q ui r e m e nt s ar e b ase d o ff mat e ria l t h at i s 0.0 2 5 inch es a nd thi c k er d e p e nd i ng o n th e ca t ego r y c l ass ifi ca ti o n. Th e fu e l c l a ddin g wa l l t h ickn ess i s b e l ow 0.0 25 inch es fo r this a pl i cati o n. T he a ppli ca nt s t a t e d th a t the t hin c l addi n g wa ll p r ovi d es a n a dditi o nal m a r g in aga in s t brittl e fr a ctur e in th e m a t e ri al r e l a ti e t o th e R eg u l a t o ry G uid e 7.11 r eq uir e m e n ts beca u se th e s tr ess s t a t es wo uld b e geo m e tri ca l l y for ced t o b e in pl a ne s tr ess l oa ding w hi c h has a hi g h e r fr ac tur e t o u g hn ess t h a n th e pl a ns t ra in l oa din g. Creep Mo d e l Eva lu a ti o n T h e staff n o t e d th a t it m ay h ave qu es ti o n s r e l a t ed t o th e fo ll ow in g t o pi cs: I. b ases for the a l l owa b l e h oo p s tr ess of 6 5.2 m ega p asc a l s (MP a); 2. r efe r e n ce a nd j u s t i fi ca ti o n of th e ge n e r a l i ze d c r e ep e qu a ti o n; 3. so m e in co n siste n c i es w ith unit s (e.g., kil o Jo ul e p er m o l (kJ/m o l) ve r s u s kil o Joul e p er K e l v in m ol (kJ/K *km o l)] n eeds t o be r ev i sed; 4. d e m o n s trat e th at t h e I 0% c r ee p s tra i n li mit i s co n se r va t i ve and prov i d e th e PeC r A I s tr ess-s train c ur ve a t th e hi gh t empera tur es; a n d 5. d i sc u ss i o n a b o ut h ow th e h y p o t h e ti ca l acc id e nt co nditi o n th e rm al t es ts a nd a n a l ys i s co n s id e r th e d a m age fro m ot h er h y p o th e t ica l acc id e nt co nditi on t es t s (e.g., drop , i mp ac t). T he s t aff as k e d s imil a r qu es ti o n s in th e r ece n t r ev i s i on t o th e Mode l No. R A J-I I (Ce 11ifi ca t e of Co mp l i a n ce, R ev i s i o n 1 1 ). A t the e nd of t h e m ee tin g the a ppli ca nt ex pr esse d inter es ts o n ha v ing a dditi o n a l ph o n e ca ll s t o di sc u ss t h e s t affs qu es ti o ns a n d a t o-face m ee tin g. Di v i s i o n o f S p e nt F u e l M a na ge ment s taff and m a n a ge m e nt n o 1 t e d that the a pp l i ca nt ca n a l so r e qu es t a pu b li c m ee tin g t o h a ve a d e t a i l ed d i sc u ss i o n o f the s taff s q u es ti o n s. Th e app l i c ant a l o r e qu es t ed t h a t if a m ee tin g were t o b e sc h e dul e d , h av in g R C qu es ti o ns at l eas t a wee k in a d va n ce w o uld e nh a n ce th e va lue o f th e m ee tin g. NRC FOR M 699 (03-2013)
I. The licensing action request consisted of up to 16 ATF lead test rods inside of two G F2 fuel assemblies (a maximum of 8 ATF lead test rods per assembly) per package with a maximum of two packages per shipment.
Page 3 o f 3}}
: 2. The A TF rods may contain Type A fissile fuel and the G F2 fuel will contai n previously approved Type B quantity fuel.
: 3. The ATF will be transported in a Type B shipment.
: 4. The applicant is requesting one shipment per year from 2017 to 2019.
In terms of the number of A TF assemblies to be shipped per year, on the top of page 2 of the cover letter, the applicant mentioned that there would be maximum of 4 A TF lead tests assemblies per shipment. The statement on the top of page 2 of the cover letter seemed to be in agreement with page 3 of the cover letter in which the applicant stated (in proposed condition 4) that "There shall be a maximum of two RAJ-II packages on single truck, each containing a maximum of two LT As." On the propo ed condi tion 5, the applicant mentioned that "RAJ-II packages with G F A TF LT As shall commingle with other RAJ-II packages... " Therefore, it was not clear for the staff the maximum number of A TF FeCrA I rods per package and the number of packages that will be shipped at any given time on a truck, including GNF ATF L TAs. The applicant indicated that the following:
I. The maximum number of ATF rods in a package will be 16.
: 2. The maximum number of packages per truck (including the packages containing ATF L TAs) will be 13-14 packages.
: 3. The near term plan is to ship two RAJ-II packages containing ATF L TAs commingling with other packages containing GNF fuel.
: 4. The applicant requested the flexibility to ship GNF fuel with GNF fuel containing ATF FeCrAI rods.
The wording of the proposed Condition 4 was clear that a maximum of two packages could be loaded per truck. When one member of the applicant's organization mentioned that the condition did not preclude additional packages on a truck. another G F-A member rightly stated that the word ing could be improved to express the application's clear intention.
Based on the evaluation section of the cover letter, the staff asked ifthe applicant was relying on the cladding as the containment boundary or not, since the evaluation section mentions that the structural and thermal evaluations demonstrated that the G F FeCrA I fuel rods would not rupture. The applicant clarified that since the application Ii i1its FeCrA I fuel rods to Type A fissile content, the applicant is not relying on the cladding as the containment boundary, but as a barrier to maintai n the pellets in a safe geometry (i.e..
for criticality safety purposes). The applicant also indicated that it analyzed water entering into the pellet-cladd ing gap. The staff mentioned that a concern was failure of the cladding resulting in pellets getting out of the cladding and radioactive material reconfiguration. The applicant mentioned that ifthe cladding burst, the applicant does not have physical data to indicate that pellet migration outside of the rod is possible. The applicant pointed out that UREG/CR-1 458 and NU REG/CR-5892 document a I
transportation accident involving a shipment ofG F fuel assemblies (including a beyond design basis tire), which caused a breach of the cladding. These NUREGs concluded that there was no fuel or pellet migrati n outside of the fuel rod and that a criticality accident was not possible during the accident or after the tire. The applicant pointed out this was included in Section 6.6.2.2 of the Letter Authorization Request. The applicant pointed out that, currently, the structural and thermal analyses do not support migration of pellets outside of the cladding under hypothetical accident conditions. However, staff had comments/questions with the structural and thermal analyses provided. The discussion below includes the staffs initial comments and questions related to the application.
Materials Evaluation The staff pointed out that the FeCrAI material is a ferritic steel. Therefore, the ta ff indicated that the applicant should use Regulatory Guide 7. I I as mentioned in the pre-application meeting. The staff asked if the ssessment of the cladd ing integrity was based on the 9 meter drop test assuming zirconium material. The applicant responded that was correct. The staff also mentioned that Figure 2-1 of of the appl ication includes a strain curve at -20 F. The applicant tated that testing of the FeCrAI material was performed at a strain rate of[withheld per 10 CFR 2,390 (application)], to which the staff commented that it wa high in comparison of a conventional strain rate. The applicant indicated that the strain rate was based on the fo llowing:
NRC FORM 699 (03-2013)
Page 2 of 3  
 
NRC FORM 699 (03-2013)
U.S. NUCLEAR REGULA TORY COMMISSION CONVERSATION RECORD (continued)
ACTION REQUIRED (Continued from page 1)
I. the duration of the impact of the RAJ-II package in previous drop tests of zirconium alloy;
: 2. the strain rate of the claddi ng is "controlled" by the package design (since the package design did not change, the applicant assumed that the strain rate did not change); and
: 3. the assumption that the design of the zirconium alloy and A TF LT A fuel bundle designs are similar for the limited number of FeCrAI rods in an ATF LTA.
The applicant did not perform physical drop tests with FeCrAI rods and assumed these were bounded by (or equi valent to) the testing performed with zirconium alloy rods. Therefore, the applicant's approach is to use the testing to certi fy the RAJ-II package fo r the ATF application.
The staff indicated that the strain rate may be acceptable, but the staff still needs information to determine whether there may be a localized effect related to the FeCrAI material. The applicant noted that the FeCrAI survi ved from a high strain rate tensile test without a fracture. The staff pointed out that the cladding of the A TF FeCrAI rod is very thin and the staff would need the fo l lowing:
I. confirm (from related literature data or testing) that the slope of stress-strain curve is higher fo r FeCrAI compared to that for zircaloy. (Otherwise, FeCrAI rods among zirconium alloy rods may be bulged out or broken during drop. Provide the stress-stra in curves for FeCrAI and zircaloy claddings so that a comparison can be made.)
: 2. data related to microhardness testing, fracture testing, Charpy V-notch test, tc.;
: 3. strain curve at low temperature (to veri fy whether the strain rate is appropriate fo r FeCrAI); and
: 4. a temperature range to maintain the integrity of the claddi ng.
The application contains a requirement for the Young's Modulus in Attachment 2 Table 2-5 (also repeated in A tt ac hm e nt
~ Table 1-2) which requires a minim um Modu lus of Elasticity for the G F FeCrAI material to be used. The applicant stated that the lower temperature of the HAC is -40°C so that was the temperature that the test was performed to bound the necessary temperature range of operation. A Stress-Strain curve fo r the GNF FeCrAI material at -40°C is provide in Attachment 3 Figure 2-1.
The Regulatory Guide 7. 11 requi rements are based off material that is 0.025 inches and thicker depending on the category classification. The fuel cladding wall thickness is below 0.025 inches for this a pl ication. The applicant stated that the thin claddi ng wall provides an additional margin against brittle fracture in the material relati e to the Regulatory Guide 7. 11 requirements because the stress states would be geometrically forced to be in plane stress loading which has a higher fracture toughness than the plane-strain loading.
Creep Model Evaluation The staff noted that it may have questions related to the fo llowing topics:
I. bases for the allowable hoop stress of 65.2 mega pascals (MPa);
: 2. reference and j ustification of the generalized creep equation;
: 3. some inconsistencies with units (e.g., kilo Joule per mol (kJ/mol) versus kilo Joule per Kelvin mol (kJ/K *kmol)] needs to be revised;
: 4. demonstrate that the I 0% creep strain limit is conservative and provide the PeCrA I stress-strain curve at the high temperatures; and
: 5. discussion about how the hypothetical accident condition thermal tests and analysis consider the damage from other hypothetical accident condition tests (e.g., drop, impact). The staff asked similar questions in the recent revision to the Model No. RAJ-I I (Ce11ificate of Compliance, Revision 11 ).
At the end of the meeting the applicant expressed interests on having additional phone calls to discuss the staffs questions and a face-to-face meeting. Division of Spent Fuel Management staff and management no 1ted that the applicant can also request a public meeting to have a detailed discussion of the staffs questions. The applicant al o requested that if a meeting were to be scheduled, having RC questions at least a week in advance would enhance the value of the meeting.
NRC FORM 699 (03-2013)
Page 3 of 3}}

Latest revision as of 10:29, 8 January 2025

9/18/2017, Conversation Record with J. Harrison Et Al. Conference Call to Discuss the Status of the Review of the Letter Authorization Request for the Model Number RAJ-II (CAC No. L25239), Non-Proprietary Information. Conversation Held on
ML17262A045
Person / Time
Site: 07109309
Issue date: 09/18/2017
From: Tae Ahn
Renewals and Materials Branch
To: Harrison J
Global Nuclear Fuel
Garcia-Santos N
Shared Package
ML17262A085 List:
References
Download: ML17262A045 (3)


Text

U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION NRC FORM 699

    • .,,..... ~.,.

(03-2013) f

~ d,**s DATE OF SIGNATURE

':/_!

'\\.,

.J."

CONVERSATION RECORD 1/f1(UJJIJ NAME OF PERSON(S) CONTACTED OR IN CONTACT WITH YOU James Harrison. et al.

E-MAIL ADDRESS james.harrison@ge.com ORGANIZATION Global Nuclear Fuel - Americas (GNF-A)

LICENSE NUMBER(S)

NA SUBJECT DOCKET NUMBER(S) 07109309 CONTROL NUMBER(S)

NA DATE OF CONTACT TYPE OF CONVERSATION 08/ 16/2017 TELEPHONE NUMBER (9 10) 620-1826 D

E-MAIL 0 TELEPHONE D

INCOMING 0 OUTGOING NON-PROPRI ETARY INFORMATIO ---8/ 16/2017, 10:00 AM CO FERENCE CALL TO DISCUSS THE STATUS OF THE REV IEW OF THE LETTER AUTHORIZATIO REQUEST FOR THE MODEL UM BER RAJ-II (CAC

0. L25239)

SUMMARY

Attendees:

NRC John McKi rgan Travis Tate Norma Garcia Santos Tae Ahn Andrew Barto Kim Yong Joseph Borowsky Caylee Kenny Daniel Forsyth Continue on Page 2 ACTION REQUIRED (IF ANY)

See ummary.

Continue on Page 3 GNF-A James Harrison Justin Lamy Christopher Kmiec James Fawcett Robert Rand Mine Yi lmaz Brian Eber Russ Fawcett NAME OF PERSON DOCUMENTING CONVERSATION Norma Garcia Santos, et al.

SIGNATURE NRC FORM 699 (03-2013)

Page 1 of 3

NRC FORM 699 (03-2013)

U.S. NUCLEAR REGULATORY COMMISSION CONVERSATION RECORD (continued)

SUMMARY

(Continued from page 1)

I On August 16, 2017, NRC and G F-A participated on a phone call to discuss status of the review of the letter authorization for the Model

o. RAJ-I I for transporting accident tolerant fuel (ATF) lead test assemblies (LT As), gain a common understanding about the licensing action requested, communicate challenges associated with the revieJ, and discuss a possible path forward to continue the review of the application. The fo llowing items summarize the discussion during the August 16 telephone call.

The staff started the meeting by going over the main aspects of the cover letter1submitted with the application to ensure that the staff and the applicant had a common understanding of the licensing actions being requested. The pa11icipants agreed on the fol lowing:

I. The licensing action request consisted of up to 16 ATF lead test rods inside of two G F2 fuel assemblies (a maximum of 8 ATF lead test rods per assembly) per package with a maximum of two packages per shipment.

2. The A TF rods may contain Type A fissile fuel and the G F2 fuel will contai n previously approved Type B quantity fuel.
3. The ATF will be transported in a Type B shipment.
4. The applicant is requesting one shipment per year from 2017 to 2019.

In terms of the number of A TF assemblies to be shipped per year, on the top of page 2 of the cover letter, the applicant mentioned that there would be maximum of 4 A TF lead tests assemblies per shipment. The statement on the top of page 2 of the cover letter seemed to be in agreement with page 3 of the cover letter in which the applicant stated (in proposed condition 4) that "There shall be a maximum of two RAJ-II packages on single truck, each containing a maximum of two LT As." On the propo ed condi tion 5, the applicant mentioned that "RAJ-II packages with G F A TF LT As shall commingle with other RAJ-II packages... " Therefore, it was not clear for the staff the maximum number of A TF FeCrA I rods per package and the number of packages that will be shipped at any given time on a truck, including GNF ATF L TAs. The applicant indicated that the following:

I. The maximum number of ATF rods in a package will be 16.

2. The maximum number of packages per truck (including the packages containing ATF L TAs) will be 13-14 packages.
3. The near term plan is to ship two RAJ-II packages containing ATF L TAs commingling with other packages containing GNF fuel.
4. The applicant requested the flexibility to ship GNF fuel with GNF fuel containing ATF FeCrAI rods.

The wording of the proposed Condition 4 was clear that a maximum of two packages could be loaded per truck. When one member of the applicant's organization mentioned that the condition did not preclude additional packages on a truck. another G F-A member rightly stated that the word ing could be improved to express the application's clear intention.

Based on the evaluation section of the cover letter, the staff asked ifthe applicant was relying on the cladding as the containment boundary or not, since the evaluation section mentions that the structural and thermal evaluations demonstrated that the G F FeCrA I fuel rods would not rupture. The applicant clarified that since the application Ii i1its FeCrA I fuel rods to Type A fissile content, the applicant is not relying on the cladding as the containment boundary, but as a barrier to maintai n the pellets in a safe geometry (i.e..

for criticality safety purposes). The applicant also indicated that it analyzed water entering into the pellet-cladd ing gap. The staff mentioned that a concern was failure of the cladding resulting in pellets getting out of the cladding and radioactive material reconfiguration. The applicant mentioned that ifthe cladding burst, the applicant does not have physical data to indicate that pellet migration outside of the rod is possible. The applicant pointed out that UREG/CR-1 458 and NU REG/CR-5892 document a I

transportation accident involving a shipment ofG F fuel assemblies (including a beyond design basis tire), which caused a breach of the cladding. These NUREGs concluded that there was no fuel or pellet migrati n outside of the fuel rod and that a criticality accident was not possible during the accident or after the tire. The applicant pointed out this was included in Section 6.6.2.2 of the Letter Authorization Request. The applicant pointed out that, currently, the structural and thermal analyses do not support migration of pellets outside of the cladding under hypothetical accident conditions. However, staff had comments/questions with the structural and thermal analyses provided. The discussion below includes the staffs initial comments and questions related to the application.

Materials Evaluation The staff pointed out that the FeCrAI material is a ferritic steel. Therefore, the ta ff indicated that the applicant should use Regulatory Guide 7. I I as mentioned in the pre-application meeting. The staff asked if the ssessment of the cladd ing integrity was based on the 9 meter drop test assuming zirconium material. The applicant responded that was correct. The staff also mentioned that Figure 2-1 of of the appl ication includes a strain curve at -20 F. The applicant tated that testing of the FeCrAI material was performed at a strain rate of[withheld per 10 CFR 2,390 (application)], to which the staff commented that it wa high in comparison of a conventional strain rate. The applicant indicated that the strain rate was based on the fo llowing:

NRC FORM 699 (03-2013)

Page 2 of 3

NRC FORM 699 (03-2013)

U.S. NUCLEAR REGULA TORY COMMISSION CONVERSATION RECORD (continued)

ACTION REQUIRED (Continued from page 1)

I. the duration of the impact of the RAJ-II package in previous drop tests of zirconium alloy;

2. the strain rate of the claddi ng is "controlled" by the package design (since the package design did not change, the applicant assumed that the strain rate did not change); and
3. the assumption that the design of the zirconium alloy and A TF LT A fuel bundle designs are similar for the limited number of FeCrAI rods in an ATF LTA.

The applicant did not perform physical drop tests with FeCrAI rods and assumed these were bounded by (or equi valent to) the testing performed with zirconium alloy rods. Therefore, the applicant's approach is to use the testing to certi fy the RAJ-II package fo r the ATF application.

The staff indicated that the strain rate may be acceptable, but the staff still needs information to determine whether there may be a localized effect related to the FeCrAI material. The applicant noted that the FeCrAI survi ved from a high strain rate tensile test without a fracture. The staff pointed out that the cladding of the A TF FeCrAI rod is very thin and the staff would need the fo l lowing:

I. confirm (from related literature data or testing) that the slope of stress-strain curve is higher fo r FeCrAI compared to that for zircaloy. (Otherwise, FeCrAI rods among zirconium alloy rods may be bulged out or broken during drop. Provide the stress-stra in curves for FeCrAI and zircaloy claddings so that a comparison can be made.)

2. data related to microhardness testing, fracture testing, Charpy V-notch test, tc.;
3. strain curve at low temperature (to veri fy whether the strain rate is appropriate fo r FeCrAI); and
4. a temperature range to maintain the integrity of the claddi ng.

The application contains a requirement for the Young's Modulus in Attachment 2 Table 2-5 (also repeated in A tt ac hm e nt

~ Table 1-2) which requires a minim um Modu lus of Elasticity for the G F FeCrAI material to be used. The applicant stated that the lower temperature of the HAC is -40°C so that was the temperature that the test was performed to bound the necessary temperature range of operation. A Stress-Strain curve fo r the GNF FeCrAI material at -40°C is provide in Attachment 3 Figure 2-1.

The Regulatory Guide 7. 11 requi rements are based off material that is 0.025 inches and thicker depending on the category classification. The fuel cladding wall thickness is below 0.025 inches for this a pl ication. The applicant stated that the thin claddi ng wall provides an additional margin against brittle fracture in the material relati e to the Regulatory Guide 7. 11 requirements because the stress states would be geometrically forced to be in plane stress loading which has a higher fracture toughness than the plane-strain loading.

Creep Model Evaluation The staff noted that it may have questions related to the fo llowing topics:

I. bases for the allowable hoop stress of 65.2 mega pascals (MPa);

2. reference and j ustification of the generalized creep equation;
3. some inconsistencies with units (e.g., kilo Joule per mol (kJ/mol) versus kilo Joule per Kelvin mol (kJ/K *kmol)] needs to be revised;
4. demonstrate that the I 0% creep strain limit is conservative and provide the PeCrA I stress-strain curve at the high temperatures; and
5. discussion about how the hypothetical accident condition thermal tests and analysis consider the damage from other hypothetical accident condition tests (e.g., drop, impact). The staff asked similar questions in the recent revision to the Model No. RAJ-I I (Ce11ificate of Compliance, Revision 11 ).

At the end of the meeting the applicant expressed interests on having additional phone calls to discuss the staffs questions and a face-to-face meeting. Division of Spent Fuel Management staff and management no 1ted that the applicant can also request a public meeting to have a detailed discussion of the staffs questions. The applicant al o requested that if a meeting were to be scheduled, having RC questions at least a week in advance would enhance the value of the meeting.

NRC FORM 699 (03-2013)

Page 3 of 3